Recently several works in the fields of Internet Studies, Science and Technology studies, and Media studies have stressed the importance of early local, national and transnational computer networks histories for a deeper understanding of technological and social change in contemporary societies.

Annonce

Date and location

14-15 December 2017 Lugano, Switzerland

Organizers

Aims and scope

Recently several works in the fields of Internet Studies, Science and Technology Studies, and Media Studies have stressed the importance of early local, national and transnational computer networks histories for a deeper understanding of technological and social change in contemporary societies.

This two-day conference has a triple aim.

First, gathering scholars and researchers from a variety of disciplines working on theoretical and empirical analysis of computer network histories.

Second, providing a wide perspective on these histories, including case studies from Asia, Africa, Latin America, and Oceania as well as international organizations dealing with the control and management of networks: this interdisciplinary and international debate could be useful to compare worldwide experiences and to provide new frames on this topic.

Third, the conference aims to develop new frameworks and a space of discussion on the historical role of computer networks, representing the starting point of an international community of scholars.

Potential topics may include, but are in no way limited to, the following:

The origins and development of computer networks under a local, national, international, or transnational perspective;

Political, economic, and cultural representations of computer networks in Western and Eastern cultures;

Comparative analysis of early and late networks;

Physical infrastructures and materiality of computer networks;

The political economy of national digital infrastructures;

Histories of the digitalization of analogic networks;

The history of failed and forgotten computer networks projects; The influence of early computer networks on the development of the Internet and of the World Wide Web;

The cultural and social history of computer networks communities (e.g. communitarian networks, academic networks, professional networks, civic networks).

Submission guidelines

All the authors are invited to send an abstract of a max 500 words and a short bio

by February 28, 2017

to nethistories@gmail.com. All invited speakers interested in publish their papers in the journal revue Histoire et Informatique will be asked to send a paper of max 5000 words by October 31, 2017.

Travel grants

A limited number of travel grants may be available for participants without access to other financial resources. To request travel funding, please add to your proposal the motivation of your request and an estimate of the needed budget.

Deadlines

28 February 2017 Deadline for abstract submission

31 March 2017 Notification of acceptance

31 October 2017 Short papers (max 5000 words) to be delivered

14-15 December 2017 2-days conference

Keynote speakers

Hu Yong is a professor at Peking University’s School of Journalism and Communication, and a well-known new media critic and Chinese Internet pioneer.

Hu Yong is a founding director for Communication Association of China (CAC) and China New Media Communication Association (CNMCA). His publications include Internet: The King Who Rules, the first book introducing the Internet to Chinese readers, and The Rising Cacophony: Personal Expression and Public Discussion in the Internet Age, documenting major transformations in the Chinese cyberspace.

Benjamin Peters is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Tulsa and affiliated fellow at the Information Society Project at Yale Law School. His research focuses on the cultural history and social theory of digital media, with emphases on the former Soviet Union and the West.

Professor Peters has recently published two books: Digital Keywords: A Vocabulary of Information Society & Culture (Princeton University Press) and How Not to Network a Nation: The Uneasy History of the Soviet Internet (MIT Press) in which he offers an account of the Soviet Union’s failed attempts to construct their own national computer networks for civilians during the height of the Cold War tech race.https://petersbenjamin.wordpress.com/